In this section, we strive to understand the ideas generated by the following important questions:

How is the average velocity of a moving object connected to the values of its position function?

How do we interpret the average velocity of an object geometrically with regard to the graph of its position function?

How is the notion of instantaneous velocity connected to average velocity?

Calculus can be viewed broadly as the study of change. A natural and important question to ask about any changing quantity is “how fast is the quantity changing?” It turns out that in order to make the answer to this question precise, substantial mathematics is required.

We begin with a familiar problem: a ball being tossed straight up in the air from an initial height. From this elementary scenario, we will ask questions about how the ball is moving. These questions will lead us to begin investigating ideas that will be central throughout our study of differential calculus and that have wide-ranging consequences. In a great deal of our thinking about calculus, we will be well-served by remembering this first example and asking ourselves how the various (sometimes abstract) ideas we are considering are related to the simple act of tossing a ball straight up in the air.

Preview Activity \(\PageIndex{1}\):

Suppose that the height s of a ball (in feet) at time t (in seconds) is given by the formula \(s(t)=64-16(t-1)^2\) .

Construct an accurate graph of \(y=s(t)\) on the time interval \(0 \le t \le 3\). Label at least six distinct points on the graph, including the three points that correspond to when the ball was released, when the ball reaches its highest point, and when the ball lands.

In everyday language, describe the behavior of the ball on the time interval \(0<t<1\) and on time interval \(1< t<3\). What occurs at the instant \(t=1\)?

Consider the expression \(AV_{[0.5,1]}=\dfrac{s(1)-s(0.5)}{1-0.5}\).

Compute the value of \(AV_{[0.5,1]}\). What does this value measure geometrically? What does this value measure physically? In particular, what are the units on \(AV_{[0.5,1]}\)?

Position and Average Velocity

Any moving object has a position that can be considered a function of time. When this motion is along a straight line, the position is given by a single variable, and we usually let this position be denoted by \(s(t)\), which reflects the fact that position is a function of time. For example, we might view \(s(t)\) as telling the mile marker of a car traveling on a straight highway at time \(t\) in hours; similarly, the function \(s\) described in Preview Activity 1.1.1 is a position function, where position is measured vertically relative to the ground.

Not only does such a moving object have a position associated with its motion, but on any time interval, the object has an average velocity. Think, for example, about driving from one location to another: the vehicle travels some number of miles over a certain time interval (measured in hours), from which we can compute the vehicle’s average velocity. In this situation, average velocity is the number of miles traveled divided by the time elapsed, which of course is given in miles per hour. Similarly, the calculation of \(AV_{[0.5,1]}\) in Preview Activity 1.1.1 found the average velocity of the ball on the time interval \([0.5, 1]\), measured in feet per second.

In general, we make the following definition: for an object moving in a straight line whose position at time \(t\) is given by the function \(s(t)\), the average velocity of the object on the interval from \(t=a\) to \(t=b\), denoted \(AV_{[a,b]}\) , is given by the formula

\[A V _ { | a , b ] } = \frac { s ( b ) - s ( a ) } { b - a }\]

Note well: the units on \(AV_{[a,b]}\) are “units of \(s\) per unit of \(t\),” such as “miles per hour” or “feet per second.”

Activity \(\PageIndex{2}\):

The following questions concern the position function given by \(s(t)=64-16(t-1)^2\), which is the same function considered in Preview Activity \(\PageIndex{1}\)

Compute the average velocity of the ball on each of the following time intervals: \([0.4, 0.8], [0.7, 0.8], [0.79, 0.8], [0.799, 0.8], [0.8, 1.2], [0.8, 0.9], [0.8, 0.81], [0.8, 0.801]\). Include units for each value.

On the provided graph in Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\), sketch the line that passes through the points \(A=(0.4, s(0.4))\) and \(B=(0.8, s(0.8))\). What is the meaning of the slope of this line? In light of this meaning, what is a geometric way to interpret each of the values computed in the preceding question?

Use a graphing utility to plot the graph of \(s(t)=64-16(t-1)^2\) on an interval containing the value \(t=0.8\). Then, zoom in repeatedly on the point \((0.8, s(0.8))\). What do you observe about how the graph appears as you view it more and more closely?

What do you conjecture is the velocity of the ball at the instant \(t=0.8\)? Why?

Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): A partial plot of \(s(t)=64-16(t-1)^2\).

Instantaneous Velocity

Whether driving a car, riding a bike, or throwing a ball, we have an intuitive sense that any moving object has a velocity at any given moment – a number that measures how fast the 4 object is moving right now. For instance, a car’s speedometer tells the driver what appears to be the car’s velocity at any given instant. In fact, the posted velocity on a speedometer is really an average velocity that is computed over a very small time interval (by computing how many revolutions the tires have undergone to compute distance traveled), since velocity fundamentally comes from considering a change in position divided by a change in time. But if we let the time interval over which average velocity is computed become shorter and shorter, then we can progress from average velocity to instantaneous velocity.

Informally, we define the instantaneous velocity of a moving object at time \(t=a\) to be the value that the average velocity approaches as we take smaller and smaller intervals of time containing \(t=a\) to compute the average velocity. We will develop a more formal definition of this momentarily, one that will end up being the foundation of much of our work in first semester calculus. For now, it is fine to think of instantaneous velocity this way: take average velocities on smaller and smaller time intervals, and if those average velocities approach a single number, then that number will be the instantaneous velocity at that point.

Activity \(\PageIndex{3}\):

Each of the following questions concern \(s(t)=64-16(t-1)^2\), the position function from Preview Activity \(\PageIndex{1}\).

Compute the average velocity of the ball on the time interval \([1.5, 2]\). What is different between this value and the average velocity on the interval \([0, 0.5]\)?

Use appropriate computing technology to estimate the instantaneous velocity of the ball at \(t=1.5\). Likewise, estimate the instantaneous velocity of the ball at \(t=2\). Which value is greater?

How is the sign of the instantaneous velocity of the ball related to its behavior at a given point in time? That is, what does positive instantaneous velocity tell you the ball is doing? Negative instantaneous velocity?

Without doing any computations, what do you expect to be the instantaneous velocity of the ball at \(t=1\)? Why?

At this point we have started to see a close connection between average velocity and instantaneous velocity, as well as how each is connected not only to the physical behavior of the moving object but also to the geometric behavior of the graph of the position function. In order to make the link between average and instantaneous velocity more formal, we will introduce the notion of limit in Section 1.2. As a preview of that concept, we look at a way to consider the limiting value of average velocity through the introduction of a parameter. Note that if we desire to know the instantaneous velocity at \(t=a\) of a moving object with position function s, we are interested in computing average velocities on the interval \([a, b]\) for smaller and smaller intervals. One way to visualize this is to think of the value \(b\) as being \(b=a+h\), where \(h\) is a small number that is allowed to vary. Thus, we observe that the average velocity of the object on the interval \([a, a+h]\) is

\[AV_{[a,a+h]}=\dfrac{s(a+h)-s(a)}{h},\]

with the denominator being simply \(h\) because \((a+h)-a=h\). Initially, it is fine to think of \(h\) being a small positive real number; but it is important to note that we allow \(h\) to be a small negative number, too, as this enables us to investigate the average velocity of the moving object on intervals prior to \(t=a\), as well as following \(t=a\). When \(h<0\), \(AV_{[a,a+h]}\) measures the average velocity on the interval \([a+h, a]\).

To attempt to find the instantaneous velocity at \(t=a\), we investigate what happens as the value of \(h\) approaches zero. We consider this further in the following example.

Example \(\PageIndex{1}\):

For a falling ball whose position function is given by \(s(t)=16-16t^2\) (where \(s\) is measured in feet and \(t\) in seconds), find an expression for the average velocity of the ball on a time interval of the form \([0.5, 0.5+h]\) where \(-0.5<h<0.5\) and \(h\), 0. Use this expression to compute the average velocity on \([0.5, 0.75]\) and \([0.4, 0.5]\), as well as to make a conjecture about the instantaneous velocity at \(t=0.5\).

Solution

We make the assumptions that \(-0.5<h<0.5\) and \(h\), 0 because \(h\) cannot be zero (otherwise there is no interval on which to compute average velocity) and because the function only makes sense on the time interval \(0 \le t \le 1\), as this is the duration of time during which the ball is falling. Observe that we want to compute and simplify

At this point, we note two things: first, the expression for average velocity clearly depends on \(h\), which it must, since as \(h\) changes the average velocity will change. Further, we note that since \(h\) can never equal zero, we may further simplify the most recent expression. Removing the common factor of \(h\) from the numerator and denominator, it follows that

\[A V _ { [ 0.5,0.5 + h ] } = - 16 - 16 h\]

Now, for any small positive or negative value of \(h\), we can compute the average velocity. For instance, to obtain the average velocity on \([0.5, 0.75]\), we let \(h=0.25\), and the average velocity is \(-16-16(0.25)=-20 ft/sec\). To get the average velocity on \([0.4, 0.5]\), we let \(h=-0.1\), which tells us the average velocity is \(-16-16(-0.1)=-14.4 ft/sec\). Moreover, we can even explore what happens to \(AV_{[0.5,0.5+h]}\) as \(h\) gets closer and closer to zero. As \(h\) approaches zero, \(-16h\) will also approach zero, and thus it appears that the instantaneous velocity of the ball at \(t=0.5\) should be \(-16 ft/sec\).

Activity \(\PageIndex{4}\):

For the function given by \(s(t)=64-16(t-1)^2\) from Preview Activity 1.1.1, find the most simplified expression you can for the average velocity of the ball on the interval \([2, 2+h]\). Use your result to compute the average velocity on \([1.5, 2]\) and to estimate the instantaneous velocity at \(t=2\). Finally, compare your earlier work in Activity \(\PageIndex{1}\)

Summary

In this section, we encountered the following important ideas:

The average velocity on \([a, b]\) can be viewed geometrically as the slope of the line between the points \((a, s(a))\) and \((b, s(b))\) on the graph of \(y=s(t)\), as shown in Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\).

Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\): The graph of position function s together with the line through \((a, s(a))\) and \((b, s(b))\) whose slope is \(m=\dfrac{s(b)-s(a)}{b-a}\). The line’s slope is the average rate of change of \(s\) on the interval \([a, b]\).

Given a moving object whose position at time \(t\) is given by a function \(s\), the average velocity of the object on the time interval \([a, b]\) is given by \(AV_{[a,b]}=\dfrac{s(b)-s(a)}{b-a}\). Viewing the interval \([a, b]\) as having the form \([a, a+h]\), we equivalently compute average velocity by the formula \(AV_{[a,a+h]}=\dfrac{s(a+h)-s(a)}{h}\) .

The instantaneous velocity of a moving object at a fixed time is estimated by considering average velocities on shorter and shorter time intervals that contain the instant of interest.

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